Paul Goble
Staunton, Dec. 25 – Sergey Davidis, a specialist on political prisoners at the Memorial Human Rights Center, says that the last 12 months have seen an attack on human rights “unprecedented” in the 30 years since the Russian Federation acquired state independence in 1991.
This attack took the form both of increased violations of the law and constitution by the authorities and also the form of the adoption of new legislation which undermined the human rights principles that remain enshrined in the Russian Constitution but are no longer observed, he continues (ridl.io/ru/hudshij-god-v-istorii-postsovetskoj-rossii/).
Among the repressive new laws are the following:
· Individuals and unregistered NGOs can now be classified as foreign agents, and the list of activities that qualify them for such designation has increased.
· Freedom of assembly has been restricted with any rally involving more than 500 people now automatically classified as electioneering and banned without permission of the state.
· Criminal liability for involvement with “’undesirable’” organizations has been expanded and simplified.
· The vague term of criminal hooliganism has been expanded, with only the threat of violence needed rather than any action now leading to a sentence of up to five years in prison.
· Threatening to block public transportation arteries is now equated with and punished in the same way as actually blocking them.
· New laws impose prison terms for those convicted of disseminating “intentionally misleading information” about World War II.
· Those who donate to an organization convicted of being terrorist are now banned from being elected to any government office for three to five years. And in another sleight of hand, past contributions can lead to the same penalties.
· The government now has the power to insist that anyone engaged in public lecturing follow approved themes and register with the authorities or face criminal sanctions.
In the course of 2021, Davidis says, law enforcement has been if anything even more outrageous in its violation of human rights than the law makers. It began the year with the crackdown on Aleksey Navalny and his supporters and ended it by shutting down the Memorial human rights effort.
In between, it persecuted Ingush protest leaders, Navalny organization activists, and those who supposedly offended the sensibilities of veterans and the Russian Orthodox Church. One measure of how bad things have become is that there are now 426 political prisoners in Russia, a new high.
“Only the most notorious law enforcement and law-making trends have been listed here. … The black-box nature of the Russian state makes it impossible to reliably determine the reason behind this disproportionate use of such severe measures,” Davidis says. But there are several obvious explanations.
“Either the Kremlin, considering the case of Lukashenko in Belarus, believes that restrictions on human rights can’t be too severe, or the Russian leadership has some as yet unrevealed plans that in its mind serve to justify this new increase in the level of repressive actions.”
“One thing however is certain, Davidis concludes. The trend line seen in 2021 shows no sign of changing for the better in 2022.
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